538 



INDEX 



Happiness, in work, i. 157 ; out- 

 balances unhappiness, ii. 82, 199 

 Harcourt, Dr. A. Vernon, at Oxford, 



1860, i. 524 . 



Hardinge, Sir H., i. 253 and note 

 Harrogate, ii. 444 

 Hartung, G., ii. 99 and note 

 Harvey, W. H., i. 26 note; early 

 friendship, 26, 173 ; Cape botany, 

 100; 'stable work' with, 170; 

 does the Algae for Fl. Ant., 173, 

 189 sq. ; obtains the Dublin chair, 

 189 ; misplaced reluctance to 

 publish, 370, 371 sq. ; consults 

 J. D. H. as to examination papers, 

 388 : on Fucus, 451 ; squib on the 

 ' Origin,' 515 sq. ; criticisms met, 

 616 sq. ; death, ii. 15 ; Genera of 

 Cape Plants finished by J. D. H., 

 ii. 15 and note ; printed, 83 



Letters from : ' Solomon Gran- 

 dy ' : how to lecture, 197 ; 198 



Letters to : Cape entomology, 

 i. 26 ; quinary system, 123 n. ; 

 Antarctic Algae, 173 sq., 189 sq., 

 Montagne appropriates, 175 ; Dar- 

 win's Alga, different identifica- 

 tions, 176 ; Dublin professorship, 

 176 ; Paris botanists, 182-6 ; Algae 

 named after officers, 190 ; Lichens : 

 species clogged by varieties, 190 ; 

 Edinburgh and the Professorship, 

 191 n.; difficulty about the 

 course, 196 ; 197 ; opening lecture, 

 199 sq. ; success in lecturing, 201 

 bis ; marine botanising in Ireland, 

 212 ; R.S. grant for botany, 371 ; 

 value of publishing preliminary 

 work, ib., bis, sq. ; the besetting 

 sin of botanists, 372 ; a duty 

 which no one else can do, 373 ; a 

 botanical career, 375 ; the Dublin 

 chair, double duty, 375-6 ; status 

 of Kew Hbm., 378 ; Brit. Mus. Col- 

 lections, 379 ; Oxford botany and 

 Maxwell Masters, 383 ; ignorance of 

 examinees, 387 ; methods of ex- 

 amination, 389 sq. ; English botani- 

 cal names, i. 395 n. ; scheme of 

 lecturing, i. 400 sq. ; Linn. Soc. 

 services to science, i. 409 ; charity 

 and sectionalism, 415; recogni- 

 tion of W. J. H. and his Hbm., 

 420 ; holiday tours, combined 

 with botany, 433 ter ; Erica McKay i 

 only a variety, 466; his destruc- 



tion of species really constructive- 

 469 ; Cardamine hirsute, 20 sp. or 

 one, 470 ; 471 ; Tasmanian Essay 

 and mutability of species, 481, 

 482, 483 ; unconsidered judgment 

 on the ' Origin,' 516 ; miracle, effi- 

 cient cause and a working hypo- 

 thesis, 517 sq. ; Darwin's sense of 

 the words, 519 ; adoption of some 

 transmutation theory, 519 



Haslar, i. 32, 39 ; Hooker at, 40 



Haughton, Dr. S., i. 512 n. ; review 

 of the 'Origin,' 512, 515, 517, 

 520 



Hawkesworth, J., ii. 312 and note 



Hay, Sir J. Drummond, ii. 91, 92 

 and note, 93 



Hayden, Prof., ii. 207, 208, 215 



Hayne, ii. 278 



Hector, Sir James, K.C.M.G.,F.R.S., 

 gives geological aid, ii. 31 



Heer, O.,i. 402 n. ; his dreary lectures, 

 402 ; his collections, ii. 35 ; nature 

 of Miocene vegetation, 36 ; an 

 extensionist, 99 



Helensburgh, Sir W. Hooker's house, 

 Burnside, i. 24, 27, ii. 356; re- 

 called by Darjiling, i. 260; Mrs. 

 Paisley's home, ii. 438, 445 



Heifer, collection arranged, i. 361 ; 

 ii. 16 ; collections saved, ii. 145 



Helianlkus, ii. 212 



Helmholtz, x Club guest, i. 544 



Helps, Sir A., x Club guest, i. 544 



Hemsley, Dr. W. B., ii. 243 n. 



Henfrey, Arthur, i. 369 n., 381 ; 

 handbook, 401 ; Nelumbrium, 423 ; 

 translation of Braun, 425 

 Letters to : medalising, i. 418 



Henslow, Frances (Mrs. J. D. Hooker, 

 q.v.), engagement, i. 219 sq. ; 

 marriage and personality, 350 



Letters to : Malta and St. Paul, 

 i. 225 ; ' the mild Hindoo,' 247 ; 

 with Hodgson, 261; Scottish 

 parallel, t'6. ; value of Nepalese 

 aid, 273 ; captivity, 316 sq. 



Henslow, George, and a botanical 

 career, i. 374; research suggested 

 to, 452 



Henslow, J.S., i. 30 n., 390 ; and Dar- 

 win, 219, 225 ; notes on Himalayan 

 agriculture for, 259; illustrations 

 of plant life at Brit. Mus., 381 ; 

 as a working professor, 383 ; the 

 Lemann Collection, 384; consults 



